[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 130 (Friday, September 24, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7440-S7441]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AQUACULTURE DISASTER ASSISTANCE
Ms. LANDRIEU. Mr. President, I come to the floor today to speak on an
issue that is of great importance to my home State of Louisiana:
Federal disaster assistance. As you know, along the gulf coast, we keep
an eye trained on the Gulf of Mexico during hurricane season. This is
following the devastating one-two punch of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita
of 2005 as well as Hurricanes Gustav and Ike last year. Our communities
and businesses are still
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recovering from these disasters--some from a disaster that devastated
the gulf coast almost 5 years ago. We are now also dealing with the
economic and environmental damage from the Deepwater Horizon disaster
which occurred this April. For this reason, as chair of the Senate
Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship ensuring effective
Federal disaster coordination is one of my top priorities. While the
gulf coast is prone to hurricanes, other parts of the country are no
strangers to disaster. For example, the Midwest has tornadoes,
California experiences earthquakes and wildfires, and the Northeast
sees crippling snowstorms. So no part of our country is spared from
disasters--disasters which can and will strike at any moment. With this
in mind, we must ensure that the Federal Government is better prepared
and has the tools necessary to respond quickly, effectively following a
disaster.
In order to help ongoing recovery efforts in the gulf coast, and to
give the U.S. Small Business Administration, SBA, more tools to respond
after a future disaster, I am proud that the House of Representatives
passed H.R. 5297, the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010. I have spoken at
length on the Senate floor about the huge impact this legislation will
have for small business owners. Today I also note that this legislation
includes an important provision improving SBA disaster assistance. This
provision builds off of SBA disaster reforms enacted in 2008 and
ensures that small businesses in the aquaculture sector will not be
left without disaster assistance following future disasters. In
particular, the provision is section 1501 of H.R. 5297. I note that
this provision is similar to section 205 of legislation I introduced
last year, the Small Business Administration Disaster Recovery and
Reform Act of 2009. This section amends the Small Business Act to make
aquaculture businesses eligible for SBA economic injury disaster loans.
Currently, the SBA determines that aquaculture includes any industry
where an individual farms aquatic organisms, farming means intervention
in the rearing process to enhance production--regular stocking,
feeding, protection from predators. These include farmers of: algae,
alligators, frogs, turtles, seaweed, clams, crawfish, pearls, fish
farms/hatcheries, mussels, and oysters. Under current provisions of the
Small Business Act, SBA is prohibited from providing assistance to
these industries as it was wrongly assumed that they would be covered
by other Federal agencies. This is because, when Congress repealed SBA
disaster assistance for agricultural businesses in the 1980s, they
mistakenly assumed that all of these businesses, including aquaculture
businesses, would be helped by the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
USDA.
For example, oystermen who seed private grounds which they own or
rent are engaged in aquaculture and are currently ineligible. Public
ground oystermen, however, who do not have exclusive use of any area,
do not farm and are eligible for SBA economic injury disaster loans. In
Louisiana, our aquaculture businesses in the southern part of the State
were hit hard by both Hurricane Katrina and Rita. These businesses,
many crawfish farmers or those with fish farms, were ineligible for
U.S. Department of Agriculture, USDA, disaster assistance, but were
also ineligible for SBA disaster loans. We also learned that similar
problems followed Hurricanes Gustav and Ike in 2008. A more recent
example of the huge problem this causes is that the SBA is currently
offering $2 million economic injury disaster loans, EIDLs, to
businesses impacted by the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Since the Small
Business Act currently prohibits aquaculture businesses from receiving
EIDLs, they were ineligible. However, no other Federal agency,
including USDA was providing assistance for this disaster. So small
businesses impacted by a disaster were told. We cannot help you, even
though no other Federal agency was there to fill in the gap.
In closing, I believe that the commonsense fix sent to the President
today will give these businesses they help they need to recover from
future disasters. Businesses involved in the farming of the following
stand to benefit greatly from this new legislation: algae, alligators,
frogs, turtles, seaweed, clams, crawfish, pearls, fish farms/
hatcheries, mussels, and oysters.
I thank the chair and ask that my entire statement and a copy of this
particular provision appear in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
SEC. 1501. AQUACULTURE BUSINESS DISASTER ASSISTANCE.
Section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632), as
amended by section 1343, is amended by adding at the end the
following:
``(z) Aquaculture Business Disaster Assistance.--Subject to
section 18(a) and notwithstanding section 18(b)(1), the
Administrator may provide disaster assistance under section
7(b)(2) to aquaculture enterprises that are small
businesses.''.
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